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Machine Growth is a series of AI-driven videos that imagines and images a biological-like life for everyday technologies, by creatively morphing them into, for example, trees, house plants, flowers, fish, or coral. Cassette tapes, phones, cameras, headphones, projectors, typewriters, and other electronic waste are “alive” in as much as they grow and spread, consume and break down, diffuse waste and minerals, shift power and stories into and around the world – literally and metaphorically. This series visually compares and contrasts electronic and biological vitality, asking:
What will digital media be and do, after us?
How will our devices weather or grow over time?
What else might our techno-waste be, and how might we sense and feel this?
Where might electronics lead our environmental and economic politics?
Can we plan and act toward new and different futures?
Machine Growth is priced to own at .05 ETH via opensea.io/collection/machine-growth. The series is almost complete, with three final pieces still in production. The series presents the potentials of alternate life cycles for what we use and throw out, what it might grow into, and how the Earth may (or may not) claim it.
Scala eXchange 2016, Thursday, 8th - Friday, 9th December at Business Design Centre, London. skillsmatter.com/conferences/7432-scala-exchange-2016#pro.... Images copyright www.edtelling.com
Postdoctoral appointee Kimberly Bassett looks at electrodeposited films to build a machine learning data set at Sandia’s Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies.
Learn more at bit.ly/3u0BTpU
Photo by Craig Fritz
Scala eXchange 2016, Thursday, 8th - Friday, 9th December at Business Design Centre, London. skillsmatter.com/conferences/7432-scala-exchange-2016#pro.... Images copyright www.edtelling.com
Scala eXchange 2016, Thursday, 8th - Friday, 9th December at Business Design Centre, London. skillsmatter.com/conferences/7432-scala-exchange-2016#pro.... Images copyright www.edtelling.com
Jerry Yang, Founding Partner, AME Cloud Ventures; Co-Founder and Former CEO of Yahoo! Inc.; Independent Director on the Board of Directors, Alibaba
Emily Chang, Anchor, Bloomberg Television
Animated GIF (download to see it in action)
Sentinel-2 based harmonised 10-daily mosaic of 2019 - NDVI with a bit different color blend
More info: medium.com/sentinel-hub/digital-twin-sandbox-sentinel-2-c...
Contains modified Copernicus data 2019
Computational neuroscientist Frances Chance is revealing insights into how dragonflies intercept their prey in flight, which might be useful for missile defense. The Sandia research is examining whether dragonfly-inspired computing could improve missile defense systems, which have the similar task of intercepting an object in flight, by making on-board computers smaller without sacrificing speed or accuracy. Dragonflies catch 95% of their prey, crowning them one of the top predators in the world.
In recent computer simulations, faux dragonflies in a simplified virtual environment successfully caught their prey using computer algorithms designed to mimic the way a dragonfly processes visual information while hunting. The positive test results show the programming is fundamentally a sound model.
Learn more at bit.ly/2K5Za1A.
Photo by Randy Montoya
Scala eXchange 2016, Thursday, 8th - Friday, 9th December at Business Design Centre, London. skillsmatter.com/conferences/7432-scala-exchange-2016#pro.... Images copyright www.edtelling.com
Tom Bianculli, Chief Technology Officer, Zebra Technologies
Virginie Maisonneuve, Chief Investment Officer, Eastspring Investments
Rich Karlgaard, Publisher and Futurist, Forbes Media
Sumant Mandal, Managing Director, March Capital Partners
Usman Shuja, General Manager, Industrial IoT, SparkCognition
Tom Bianculli, Chief Technology Officer, Zebra Technologies
Scala eXchange 2016, Thursday, 8th - Friday, 9th December at Business Design Centre, London. skillsmatter.com/conferences/7432-scala-exchange-2016#pro.... Images copyright www.edtelling.com